First Dunstan ministry
First Dunstan ministry | |
|---|---|
49th ministry of Victoria, Australia | |
| Date formed | 2 April 1935 |
| Date dissolved | 14 September 1943 |
| People and organisations | |
| Monarch | George V (until 20 January 1936) Edward VIII (20 January 1936 to 11 December 1936) George VI (from 11 December 1936) |
| Governor | Lord Huntingfield (until 4 April 1939) Sir Winston Dugan (from 17 July 1939)[a] |
| Premier | Albert Dunstan |
| Deputy premier | Murray Bourchier (until 24 June 1936) Francis Old (24 June 1936 to 14 October 1937) Albert Lind (from 14 October 1937) |
| No. of ministers | 10 |
| Member party | United Country |
| Status in legislature | Minority government 26 / 65 |
| Opposition party | United Australia |
| Opposition leader | Stanley Argyle (until 23 November 1940) Thomas Hollway (from 23 November 1940) |
| History | |
| Elections | 1937 state election 1940 state election 1943 state election |
| Predecessor | Argyle ministry |
| Successor | First Cain ministry |
The First Dunstan Ministry was the 49th ministry of the Government of Victoria. It was led by the Premier of Victoria, Albert Dunstan. The ministry was sworn in on 2 April 1935, and was the first United Country Party ministry in the history of Victoria.[1]
Portfolios
| Minister | Portfolios[2] |
|---|---|
| Albert Dunstan, MLA | |
| Murray Bourchier, MLA (to 24 June 1936) |
|
| Francis Old, MLA |
|
| Albert Lind, MLA |
|
| Edmond Hogan, MLA (to 28 June 1943) |
|
| Albert Bussau, MLA (to 18 April 1938) |
|
| Sir John Harris, MLC (to 1 January 1942) | |
| Sir George Goudie, MLC |
|
| George Tuckett, MLC |
|
| Henry Pye, MLC (to 9 April 1942) |
|
| Henry Bailey, MLA |
|
| Edwin Mackrell, MLA |
|
| Herbert Hyland, MLA |
|
| Norman Martin, MLA |
|
| Leonard Rodda, MLC |
|
| John Lienhop, MLC |
|
| John McDonald, MLA |
|
Notes
- ^ Between the end of Lord Huntingfield's Governorship and the appointment of Sir Dugan, the Governor was Lieutenant-Governor Sir Frederick Mann
References
- ^ "COUNTRY PARTY MINISTRY MR. DUNSTAN MAKES HISTORY". The Argus. Melbourne: National Library of Australia. 3 April 1935. p. 7. Retrieved 26 March 2011.
- ^ Adam, Carr. "VICTORIAN MINISTIRES - 1st Dunstan Ministry". Psephos Adam Carr's Election Archive. Retrieved 28 September 2023.